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Seattle campus shooting suspect named

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Student stops Seattle Pacific shooter

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Student stops Seattle Pacific shooter02:01

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University 14 photos

Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Two women embrace near a prayer circle Friday, June 6, on the campus of Seattle Pacific University. A day earlier, a gunman entered the school's science and engineering building, shot three people and was reloading a shotgun when a student subdued him, police said.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Students at the school mourn after the shooting on Thursday, June 5.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Students gather in a prayer circle June 5 after a church service was full.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Seattle police officers run toward a campus building after the shooting June 5.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Jon Meis, the student credited with dousing the gunman with pepper spray and tackling him, is loaded into an ambulance after the incident.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Briana Clarke, a student at Seattle Pacific University, cries at the scene of the shooting.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Medical and police officers gather at the scene.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Seattle Pacific University students are led out of the crime scene.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Seattle firefighters load a victim into an ambulance near the scene of the shooting.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Bystanders embrace near the scene.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Police officers conduct searches on students after the shooting.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Emergency personnel gather near the scene of the shooting.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Bystanders look on as emergency personnel arrive near the scene of the shooting.

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Photos: Shooting at Seattle Pacific University14 photos

Shooting at Seattle Pacific University – Law enforcement officers gather near the scene.

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EXPAND GALLERY

A man who said he was close friends with Meis' older brother and sister-and-law described him as "amazingly resourceful."

"I wasn't surprised to see he was the hero -- his resourcefulness, love for others and knowledge of the greater good are what defines him, in my mind," Andrew Van Ness told CNN in an e-mail.

Van Ness said Meis enjoyed playing a campus "humans versus zombies" game organized by the school's Student Union Board, finishing in the top 10 both times the game was held.

On Thursday, Meis appeared shaken, at moments on the verge of tears, when ambulances arrived to tend to the wounded. Medics put him on a stretcher and took him to a hospital to check him over.

Harborview Medical Center spokeswoman Susan Gregg didn't identify Meis by name but said a man believed to be the student hero was thoroughly evaluated and released. He had no injuries, she said.

Police would not give out his name, but one of his friends was quick to point him out to CNN affiliate KOMO and pour out his gratitude.

"I could have been one of these people that was injured or in critical condition," said Meis' friend Patrick Maguire. "A lot of (students) were in that building, and he stopped him in the lobby. He didn't get any farther than that. I'm grateful for him, yeah."

Meis, an engineering student, has a reputation for keeping a low profile, not seeking attention, The Seattle Times reported. He is known as a devout Christian and an excellent student.

Meis' sister told the newspaper that the family wasn't commenting for the moment. But he hasn't been able to dodge the social media limelight, which has plastered his name and photos across the Internet with emphatic kudos.